Nicole Mary Kidman, AC (born 20 June 1967 (birth time source: Sy Scholfield, Astrodatabank)) is an Australian actress, singer and film producer. Kidman's film career began in 1983. She starred in various Australian film and television productions until her breakthrough in the 1989 thriller Dead Calm. Following several films over the early 1990s, she came to worldwide recognition for her performances in Days of Thunder (1990), Far and Away (1992), and Batman Forever (1995). She followed these with other successful films in the late 1990s. Her performance in the musical, Moulin Rouge! (2001) earned her second Golden Globe Award and first Academy Award nomination for Best Actress. Her performance as Virginia Woolf in the drama film The Hours (2002) received critical acclaim and earned Kidman ...

Jean-Marie Le Pen (French pronunciation: ​; born 20 June 1928 (birth time source: Didier Geslain)) is a French politician who led the National Front party from its foundation in 1972 until 2011.
His longevity in politics and his five attempts to become president of France have made him a major figure in French political life. His progression in the late 1980s is known as the "Lepénisation des esprits" or lepénisation of spirits due to its noticeable effect on mainstream political opinion. Lepenism in France refers to his eurosceptic, nationalist and conservative ideas. His controversial speeches and his integration into public life have made him a figure that polarizes opinion, considered as the "Devil of the Republic" among his opponents or as the last samurai in politics among h...

Lionel Brockman Richie, Jr. (born June 20, 1949) is a Grammy Award-winning American R&B and soul singer, Academy Award-winning songwriter, record producer, and occasional actor. He has sold over fifty million records.
Height
5' 11" (1.80 m)
Career
His fame began when he was the frontman for the Commodores, a nationally popular Motown band during the early 1970s. They had several hits such as "Easy". "Three Times a Lady," and "Brick House." Richie left the Commodores in 1981 for a solo career, becoming one of the most successful artists of the Eighties with five number 1 hits and thirteen consecutive Top 10 hits in the U.S.
He released his self-titled debut in 1982. The album hit #3 on the music charts and sold over 4 million copies. His 1983 follow up album, Can't Slow Down, so...

Brian Douglas Wilson (born June 20, 1942 in Hawthorne, California), is an American pop musician, best known as the lead songwriter, bassist, and singer of the American rock band The Beach Boys. Wilson was also the band's main producer, composer, and arranger.
Early influences included The Four Freshmen and Chuck Berry, among others. Wilson admired Phil Spector, considering him both a mentor and rival.
Wilson was a perfectionist in the studio, and often upset the other members of the Beach Boys with this incessant drive for perfection. Though one of the first users of an eight-channel multitrack tape recorder, he shunned stereophonic sound, preferring (as Spector did) to work in monaural — because he believed stereo gave an incomplete "sound picture" if the listener wasn't directly be...

John Stephen Goodman (born June 20, 1952) is a Golden Globe- and Emmy-winning American actor, perhaps best known for his roles on the television series Roseanne, and in several Hollywood films.
Height: 1m88 (6'2")
Weight: 180 kg in 1992
Early life
Goodman was born in Affton, Missouri, the son of Virginia, a store clerk and waitress who worked at Jack and Phil's Bar-B-Cue, and Leslie Goodman, a postal worker who died from a heart attack in 1954. He has a sister, Elisabeth, and a brother, Leslie. Goodman went to Affton High School and won a football scholarship at Southwest Missouri State University, now called Missouri State University. He pledged the Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity, but was not formally initiated until several decades later. During his college stint, he decided to bec...

Josh Lucas (born Joshua Lucas Easy Dent Maurer on June 20, 1971) is an American actor. He is perhaps best known for his roles in several Hollywood films, including Glory Road and Poseidon.
Early life
Lucas was born in Little Rock, Arkansas to Don Maurer, an ER-doctor, and Michelle, a nurse. At the time of his birth, his parents were living on an Indian reservation. Lucas grew up traveling the South with his parents (who were anti-nuclear activists) and younger siblings, two sisters and a brother; by the age of 13, he had lived in 30 different locations, including the Isle of Palms and Sullivan's Island, South Carolina. The family eventually settled in the small town of Gig Harbor, Washington, which is now an exurb or dormitory town of Tacoma. He attended Kopachuck Middle School. He lat...

Jean Moulin (June 20, 1899–July 8, 1943) was a high-profile member of the French Resistance during World War II. He is remembered today as an emblem of the Resistance primarily due to his courage and death at the hands of the Germans.
Before the war
Moulin was born in Béziers, France, and enlisted in the French Army in 1918, but World War I ended before he saw any action. After the war, he resumed his studies and obtained a law degree in 1921. He then entered the prefectural administration as chef de cabinet to the deputy of Savoie in 1922, then as sous préfet of Albertville, from 1925 to 1930. He was France's youngest sous préfet at the time, and was also the youngest préfet in 1930.
He married Marguerite Cerruti in September 1926, but the couple divorced in 1928.
In 1930, he wa...

Frank James Lampard, Jr. (born 20 June 1978) is an English football player currently at Chelsea and previously with West Ham United and Swansea City.
Lampard was born in Romford, East London, England. He is the son of Frank Lampard Sr., the former England full back and two-time FA Cup winner with West Ham United. His family is related to another famous footballing family, the Redknapps. Lampard was educated at Brentwood School, a boys' independent school in Brentwood, Essex.
A current England national team regular, he has won the English Premiership twice (with Chelsea, 2004–05 and 2005–06), the FA Cup (with Chelsea, 2007) twice the League Cup (with Chelsea, 2005 and 2007), the FA Community Shield (with Chelsea, 2005), and the UEFA Intertoto Cup (with West Ham, 1999).
In November ...

Chino Moreno (born Camillo Wong Moreno June 20, 1973) is an American musician. He is the lead singer and back-up guitarist in Deftones and Team Sleep. Moreno was born in Sacramento, California to a Mexican father and a Mexican/Irish/Native American/Chinese mother; the latter being the origin of his Spanish nickname Chino (a nickname given to Latinos with Asian features), which means "Chinese" in Spanish. He was the third of five children. The Deftones were quite close with the stepson of Max Cavalera of Sepultura and Soulfly, Dana Wells, and when he died, Chino Moreno was one of the pallbearers at his funeral.
In relation to his often ambiguous yet image-heavy poetic lyrics, Moreno quotes: " my lyrics don't deal with specific topics. I write down on paper the feelings of the moment, it'...

Jacques Offenbach (20 June 1819 – 5 October 1880) was a French composer and cellist of the Romantic era with German-Jewish descent and one of the originators of the operetta form. He was one of the most influential composers of popular music in Europe in the 19th century, and many of his works remain in the repertory. While his name remains most closely associated with the French operetta and the Second Empire, it is his one fully operatic masterpiece, Les contes d'Hoffmann (The Tales of Hoffmann), that has become the most frequently performed of Offenbach's works.
Offenbach's father, born Isaac Eberst in Offenbach am Main around 1780, changed his name to Offenbach when he settled down in Deutz in 1802. He was a man of many talents who worked as a bookbinder, translator, publisher, musi...

Gustavo Adolfo Rol (20 June 1903-22 September 1994) was an Italian thinker and teacher with a great interest in parapsychology and other extraordinary phenomena. His devotees consider him to have been a great spiritual master and have testified to various miraculous feats he supposedly accomplished.
Rol was born in Turin, Italy, and studied law at the University of Turin. He also studied in London and Paris and began a banking career that took him to other major European cities. While in Marseille during 1925-1926, he encountered a personage who showed him some card tricks, triggering an interest in magical and paranormal phenomena. He pursued deeper spiritual studies and had an experience in Paris of which he wrote in his diary: "I discovered a terrible law that links the color green, ...

Simone Ehivet Gbagbo (born June 20, 1949) is an Ivorian politician. She is the President of the Parliamentary Group of the Ivorian Popular Front (FPI) and is a Vice-President of the FPI. As the wife of Laurent Gbagbo, the former President of Côte d'Ivoire, she is also first lady.
Biography
Born in 1949 in the Moossou neighborhood of Grand-Bassam, Côte d'Ivoire, her parents are Jean Ehivet, a local police officer, and Marie Djaha. Simone Gbagbo trained as an historian and earned a "3rd cycle Doctorate in oral literature. She has worked in Applied Linguistics, as a Marxist labor union leader, and is an Evangelical Christian in a church with close ties to the United States. She is the mother of five daughters, the last two with her current husband Laurent Gbagbo. She has been nicknamed ...

Martin Landau (born June 20, 1931) is an Academy Award-winning American film and television actor. He is perhaps most well-known for his roles in the television series Mission: Impossible (1966 - 1969) and Space: 1999 (1975 - 1977). He received a Golden Globe award in 1969 for his performance in the former, playing the role of mission specialist Rollin Hand. In 1968 and 1969 he received Emmy award nominations for best actor in a dramatic series for his Mission: Impossible work. In 1994 he won the Oscar (among other awards) for Best Supporting Actor in the critically acclaimed movie Ed Wood, having already received two previous Oscar nominations.
Height
6' 3" (1.91 m)
Landau was born in Brooklyn, New York, and at the age of 17 began working as a cartoonist for the New York Daily New...

Audie Leon Murphy (June 20, 1924 (birth time source: Astrodatabank. Himself claims that he was born in 1925, same day and time of birth)) – May 28, 1971) was an American soldier in World War II, who later became an actor, appearing in 44 American films.He also found success as a country music composer.
In 27 months of combat action, Murphy became the most decorated United States combat soldier of World War II. He received the Medal of Honor, the U.S. military's highest award for valor, along with 32 additional U.S. medals, five from France, and one from Belgium.
Murphy had a successful movie career, including the extremely popular To Hell and Back (1955), based on his memoir of the same name (1949), and starred in 33 Hollywood Westerns. He died in a plane crash in 1971 and was inter...

Robert Anthony Rodriguez (born June 20, 1968) is an American director, writer, producer, cinematographer, editor and musician perhaps best known for making profitable, crowd-pleasing independent and studio films with fairly low budgets and fast schedules by Hollywood standards. He shoots and produces many of his films in Texas and Mexico.
Biography
Early life
Rodríguez was born in San Antonio, Texas, the son of Rebecca, a nurse, and Cecilio G. Rodríguez, a sales manager. He began his interest in film at age 7 when his father bought one of the first VCRs, which came with a camera. He took the camera and started to make short films with his brothers and sisters participating as the cast and crew. It helped that there were ten of them (including Robert), and these early stages provid...

Daniel Louis Aiello, Jr. (born June 20, 1933) is an Academy Award-nominated, Emmy Award-winning American actor who has appeared in numerous motion pictures, including Once Upon a Time in America, Ruby, The Godfather: Part II, Hudson Hawk, The Purple Rose of Cairo, Moonstruck, Léon: The Professional, Two Days in the Valley, and Dinner Rush. He had a pivotal role in the 1989 Spike Lee film Do the Right Thing, earning a nomination for a Best Supporting Actor Academy Award for his portrayal of Sal, the pizzeria owner.
Early life
Aiello, the second youngest of six children, was born in Manhattan, the son of Italian American parents Frances (née Pietrocova), a seamstress who was a native of Naples, Italy, and Daniel Louis Aiello, Sr., a laborer. He moved to the South Bronx when he was seven ...

John Taylor (born Nigel John Taylor on June 20, 1960 in Birmingham, England) is the bass guitarist and co-founder of the Pop band Duran Duran. Duran Duran was one of the most popular groups in the world during the 1980s, thanks to revolutionary music videos that played in heavy rotation in the early days of MTV, and Taylor was one of Duran Duran's most popular members.
Taylor played with Duran Duran and its changing lineups from its founding in 1978 until 1997, when he left to pursue a solo recording and film career. He made a dozen solo releases (albums, EPs, and video projects) through his company "Trust The Process" in the next four years, had a lead role in the movie Sugar Town, and made appearances in half a dozen other film projects. He rejoined Duran Duran for a full reunion of t...

Gérard Collomb, born on June 20, 1947 in Chalon-sur-Saône (birth time source: Didier Geslain) is a French politician. He is an active member of the French Socialist Party and has been Mayor of Lyon (Rhône) since March 2001.
He was elected as a Socialist municipal councillor for the 9th arrondissements in the French municipal elections, 1977. In 1981, he was elected to the French National Assembly at age thirty-four. From 1989 on, he led by the municipal opposition to Michel Noir in the Lyon municipal council. From 1992 to 1999 he also served as regional councillor for the Rhône-Alpes region.
Defeated in the 1995 local elections in Lyon, he ran as leader of the Plural Left list in the 2001 local elections. He was elected Mayor on 25 March and also elected as president of the Urban Com...

Marceline Desbordes-Valmore (June 20, 1786 - July 23, 1859) was a French poet.
She was born in Douai. Following the French Revolution, her family emigrated to Guadeloupe. In 1817 she married her second husband, the actor Prosper Lanchantin-Valmore.
She published Élégies et Romances, her first poetic work, in 1819. Her melancholy, elegiaical poems are admired for their grace and profound emotion.
Marceline appeared as an actress and singer in Douai, Rouen, the 'Opéra-Comique' in Paris, and 'Théâtre de la Monnaie in Brussels, where she notably played Rosine in Beaumarchais's le Barbier de Séville. She retired from the stage in 1823.
Her poetry is also known for being dark and depressing which reflects her troubled and hard-luck life. She is the only female writer included in the ...

Chester Burton "Chet" Atkins (June 20, 1924 – June 30, 2001) was an influential guitarist and record producer.
His picking style, inspired by Merle Travis, Django Reinhardt, George Barnes and Les Paul, brought him admirers both within and outside the country scene, both in the U.S.A. and internationally. Atkins produced records for Perry Como, Elvis Presley, Eddy Arnold, Don Gibson, Jim Reeves, Jerry Reed, Skeeter Davis, Connie Smith, Waylon Jennings, and others.
He created, along with Owen Bradley, the smoother country music style known as the Nashville sound, which expanded country music's appeal to include adult pop music fans as well.
Chet Atkins was born on June 20, 1924, in Luttrell, Tennessee, near the Clinch Mountains, and grew up with his mother, two brothers and a sister...

Rossana Podestà (born June 20, 1934) is an Italian former actress.
Life
She was born in the Italian colony of Libya, where she spent her first years in Tripoli and later moved to Rome after World War II. She still lives in Italy, in Dubino (Sondrio province), together with the famous mountain climber, explorer and journalist Walter Bonatti..
Actress career
Her most memorable role was as Helen in Helen of Troy, produced by Robert Wise in 1956. She could not speak English so she learned her lines by rote with a voice coach. The movie gave Podestá an international importance and was done with a young Brigitte Bardot.
Rossana Podestá worked even in the movie "Ulisse" of Mario Camerini and in the sixties and seventies did some romantic and love movies ("Paolo il caldo", "Il prete s...

François Huwart, born June 20, 1947 in Nogent-le-Rotrou (Eure-et-Loir), is a French politician, member of Parti Radical de Gauche (The 'Left Radical Party (Parti Radical de Gauche, PRG) is a minor French centre-left, social-liberal party with moderate views, formed in 1972 by a split from the Radical, Republican and Radical-Socialists Party, once the dominant party of the French left.
The PRG, originally known as the Movement of the Radical-Socialist Left (Mouvement de la Gauche Radicale-Socialiste) then as the Movement of Radicals of the Left (Mouvement des Radicaux de Gauche), retains some support among middle-class voters and in traditional Radical areas in the south-west, but it only gains parliamentary representation by courtesy of the Socialist Party, with which it has been in clo...

John McCook (b. June 20, 1945, Ventura, California) is an Emmy Award-nominated American actor best known for his roles on daytime soap operas.
Career
Since 1987, he has played the role of Eric Forrester on The Bold and the Beautiful. From 1975 to 1980, he portrayed the character of Lance Prentiss on The Young and the Restless. In addition, he has appeared as a guest in episodes on dozens of primetime series. B&B co-star Winsor Harmon once starred with McCook on an episode of Acapulco H.E.A.T. filmed in Mexico. Harmon told Soap Opera Digest about their guest stint on H.E.A.T.:
"I hung out with John McCook the whole time and I kept watching all these people from other countries asking for his autograph. I'm thinking to myself, 'Who the hell is this guy?' So one night, we were drinking...

Anne Murray, CC, ONS (born Morna Anne Murray on June 20, 1945) is a Canadian born in Springhill, Nova Scotia, known for her rich contralto voice and her choice of songs appealing to listeners over a broad spectrum, including Pop, Country and Adult Contemporary styles.
Murray was the first Canadian female solo singer to reach #1 on the U.S. charts, and also the first to earn a gold record for one of her signature songs, 1970s "Snowbird." She is often cited as the woman who paved the way for other Canadian international success stories such as Céline Dion, Sarah McLachlan and Shania Twain. So far, her albums have sold over 54 million copies worldwide. She is also the first woman and the first Canadian to win "Album of the Year" at the Country Music Association Awards for her 1984 album A...

Kay Rala Xanana Gusmão GCL (born José Alexandre Gusmão, on June 20, 1946) is a former militant who was the first President of East Timor, serving from May 2002 to May 2007. He later became the fourth and current Prime Minister of East Timor on August 8, 2007.
Life
Early years
Gusmão was born to school teacher parents in Manatuto in what was then Portuguese Timor, and attended a Jesuit high school just outside of Dili. After leaving high-school for financial reasons at the age of sixteen, he held a variety of unskilled jobs, while continuing his education at night school. In 1965, at the age of 19, he met Emilia Batista, who was later to become his wife. His nickname, "Xanana", was taken from the musical lyric, "Sha-na-na".
In 1966, Gusmão obtained a position with the public serv...

Nouri Kamil Mohammed Hasan al-Maliki (Arabic: نوري كامل محمّد حسن المالكي‎ Nūrī Kāmil al-Mālikī; born June 20, 1950), also known as Jawad al-Maliki or Abu Esraa, is the Prime Minister of Iraq and the secretary-general of the Islamic Dawa Party. Al-Maliki and his government succeeded the Iraqi Transitional Government. He is currently in his second term as Prime Minister. His first Cabinet was approved by the National Assembly and sworn in on May 20, 2006; his second Cabinet, in which he also holds the positions of acting Interior Minister, acting Defense Minister, and acting National Security Minister, was approved on Decemb...

Quinton Ramone Jackson (born June 20, 1978 in Memphis, Tennessee), also known as Rampage Jackson, is an American mixed martial artist and actor. He is a former UFC Light-Heavyweight title holder. Jackson rose to prominence in Japan's Pride Fighting Championships where he was noted for his powerful body slams including a famous knockout victory over Ricardo Arona. In the United States, he is known for his tenure in the Ultimate Fighting Championship (UFC). Jackson is the first person to unify any of the UFC and Pride FC championship belts, defeating Pride Fighting Championships Light-Heavyweight title holder Dan Henderson in 2007.
Jackson appeared for a second time as a coach on the reality series The Ultimate Fighter opposite Rashad Evans. They were scheduled to fight at UFC 107, but t...

Dominic Wynn Woods (born June 20, 1992), better known by his stage name Sage the Gemini, is an American rapper from Fairfield, California. He is a member of California's The HBK Gang. He is known for his single "Gas Pedal" featuring Iamsu!, which peaked at #29 on the Billboard Hot 100, making it both artists' first top 40 hit, #6 on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs and #4 on the Hot Rap Songs charts in 2013. Sage's song "Red Nose" also peaked at at #54 on the Hot 100 and at #12 on the Hot R&B Hip-Hop Songs. Both songs are taken from his debut EP Gas Pedal, which peaked at #29 on the R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart. He signed to Republic Records in August 2013.
Discography
EPs
2013: Gas Pedal EP
Mixtapes
2013: Gang Forever (with HBK Gang)
Singles
2013: "Gas Pedal"
2013: "Red Nose"
2013: "Swerv...

Léon Joseph Florentin Bonnat (June 20, 1833 – September 8, 1922) was a French painter.
He was born in Bayonne, but from 1846 to 1853 he lived in Madrid, Spain, where his father owned a bookshop. While tending his father's shop, he copied engravings of works by the Old masters, developing a passion for drawing. In Madrid he received his artistic training under Madrazo. He later worked in Paris, where he became known as a leading portraitist, never without a commission. His many portraits show the influence of Velázquez, Jusepe de Ribera and other Spanish masters, as well as Titian and Van Dyke, whose works he studied in the Prado. Following the period in Spain Bonnat worked the ateliers of the history painters Paul Delaroche and Leon Cogniet (1854) in Paris. Despite repeated attempts, he...

Leah Andreone (born June 20, 1972) is an American musician from San Diego, California.
Early life and career
Andreone was born and raised in San Diego and attended Helix High School in La Mesa. She became interested in music early in life, finding it an easy way to express emotion. After high school she spent time in Los Angeles, working during the day and singing at night.
Her first album, Veiled, produced by Rick Neigher, was released by RCA in 1996. It produced the hit single "It's Alright, It's Okay" which charted in both the U.S. and Europe. It was introspective whereas her next album, Alchemy, was more sexual and intimate. Andreone's lyrics are often treatises on psychology, reflecting her interest in the subject.
Since Alchemy, Andreone has continued to write and perfor...

Louise Henriette de Bourbon-Conti, « Mademoiselle de Conti » (Paris June 20, 1726 - Paris February 9, 1759), was by marriage Duchesse de Chartres (1743-1752) and Duchesse d'Orléans (1752-1759).
She was a daughter of Louis Armand II de Bourbon, prince de Conti and Louise Élisabeth of Bourbon-Condé.
She married on December 17 1743 Louis Philippe I, Duke of Orléans.
His pious father, Louis of Bourbon, Duke of Orléans, had had a lot of difficulties in finding a suitable wife for his son, and accepted the not so glorious background of Louise Henriette believing that this girl was a model of Christian virtues, having being raised in a convent. This turned out to be a big misjudgment. Louise Henriette caused a lot of scandal by her misconduct.
The unhappy marriage produced three children ...

Giannina Arangi-Lombardi (June 20, 1891, Marigliano - July 9, 1951, Milan) was an Italian operatic soprano, particularly associated with the Italian repertory.
She studied in Naples with B. Carelli, and made her debut in Rome in 1920, singing for three years mezzo-soprano roles. After further studies with Adelina Stehle and Poli-Randaccio, she made a new debut as a soprano in 1923.
She sang at the Teatro alla Scala in Milan from 1924 to 1930, making her debut as Elena in Boito 's Mefistofele, under Arturo Toscanini. Rapidly invited in all the great opera houses of Europe, although she never appeared in Paris nor London, she also sang to great acclaim in South America. She was chosen by Nellie Melba for her farewell tour of Australia in 1928.
She was especially renowned in roles su...

The Infante Don Juan of Spain, Count of Barcelona (Juan Carlos Teresa Silvestre Alfonso de Borbón y Battenberg) (La Granja, Segovia, June 20, 1913 – Pamplona, April 1, 1993), was the fourth son and designated heir of King Alfonso XIII of Spain and Victoria Eugenie of Battenberg, the monarch replaced by the Second Spanish Republic, and father of King Juan Carlos, under whom a constitutional monarchy was restored. As King, he would have been Juan III of Spain.
Early life and marriage
Juan was born at the Palace of San Ildefonso. His father was forced into exile when the Second Spanish Republic was proclaimed on April 14, 1931. Due to the renunciations of his brothers Alfonso of Spain, Prince of Asturias and Infante Jaime, Duke of Segovia Infante Juan was thus next in line to the Spanish ...

Alan Longmuir (born 20 June 1949) was the bass guitarist for the 1970s pop group, the Bay City Rollers.
He was born at Simpson Memorial Maternity Pavilion Hospital, Prestwick, Scotland, and is the elder brother of the group's drummer, Derek Longmuir. In 1976, at the height of the band's popularity, Alan was replaced by Ian Mitchell, a man ten years his junior. Tam Paton, then the group's manager, revealed that Alan had tried to commit suicide. Longmuir would return to the group in 1978.
Longmuir played the lead in the 1981 film Burning Rubber, an auto-racing melodrama filmed in South Africa.
Lately in poor health, he suffered a heart attack in 1995 and a stroke in 1997.
Today, Longmuir lives with his wife, Eileen, in Scotland.
References
Stambler, Irwin, Encyclopedia of Po...

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